| mainstreaming |
The concept that students with disabilities should be integrated with their non-disabled peers to the maximum extent possible, when appropriate to the needs of the child with a disability. Mainstreaming is one point on a continuum of educational options. The term is sometimes used synonymously with "inclusion."
Ãâó: www.handsandvoices.org/resource_guide/19_definitio...
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| mainstreaming |
Integration of students with disabilities physically, academically, and socially with age peers.
Ãâó: www.upei.ca/~xliu/measurement/glossary.htm
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| mainstreaming |
Integrating deaf or hard of hearing children in classes with their normal hearing peers to the maximum extent possible under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA).
Ãâó: www.nr.edu/cdhh/sotac%20resource%20guide/glossary....
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| mainstream |
The usual educational placement of a child. To mainstream a child is to place him in a regular class or something approaching it, rather than in a self-contained special class. See also "mainstreaming".
Ãâó: www.ourspecialkids.org/definitions2.html
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| mainstreaming |
This word is used to describe the education of mildly handicapped students (usually EI, LD, EMI) to the maximum extent possible with non-handicapped students. Maximum extent means you have to be able to prove that students can't learn the "stuff" in the regular education room and can only learn it in a special education room.
Ãâó: www.aaps.k12.mi.us/huron.special_ed/glossary_of_te...
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